How Budweiser Maintains Its Status as America’s Best Beer Brand

The fact that it ranked #25 in Forbes’ list of the World’s Most Valuable Brands and acquired a valuation of $23.4 billion—is a testament to its success.

How does Budweiser keep customers coming back for more? Let’s glance through their recent marketing strategies and campaigns.

1. America Can campaign: No publicity is bad publicity

In the last 2016 elections, Budweiser announced that its cans will read “America.”

It seemed pretty patriotic for a traditional American brand that was bought by a company in Belgium, last 2008.

While the America slogan seemed ironic, the name change seemed timely to ride the wave of Trump’s patriotic “Make America Great Again” campaign.

In fact, when Trump was asked if he influenced the name change of the beer brand, he said, “I think so. They’re so impressed with what our country will become that they decided to do this before the fact.”

Not surprisingly, a lot of people were not happy with the rebrand.

Millennials took to social media to mock the name-change. Instagram and Facebook were filled with hundreds of memes and jokes, while Twitter was filled with thousands of mentions and tags.

Journalists jumped in the bandwagon to write about the worst rebrand in American history.

Interestingly, the bad publicity was not bad at all for Budweiser. A market research study, found that the brand’s core customers are the traditional middle-class, patriotic, union worker.

So, was the campaign a boom or a bust?

Considering that the brand was worth $23.4 billion last 2016, it seems that no publicity is bad publicity.

3. Born the Hard Way: creates politically relevant advertisements

The ad featured the life of its Adolphus Busch—the 19th century German refugee—who found the beer brand.

The ad was timely because it aimed to ride the public’s disapproval of President Trump’s US travel ban. While Adolphus was not a Muslim, it reminded viewers that the American heritage has always celebrated diversity.

By creating an ad with a strong message, Budweiser’s ad was able to make a lasting impact.

4. Sponsors live music events to create unforgettable brand experiences

Everyone loves music festivals.

To state the obvious, experiences at concerts and festivals have always been unforgettable. This is probably why half of Americans spend an average of $152 annually for these events.

But here’s what Budweiser did absolutely right—it launched its own live events—the Made In America Festival and The Budweiser Country Club.

“It’s no longer about the signage or the size of a logo on a poster or a ticket or a stage. It’s about what people talk about and the experience they take away and talk about later and remember and post online.” said the VP of Budweiser, Ricardo Marques, in an interview.

Interestingly, Budweiser went all out in its campaign.

The brand was estimated to have spent $2.5 million on a thousand-square-foot barn-shaped club. The performers for its events were stars such as Florida Georgia Line and Thomas Rhett. Additionally, the area had spaces dedicated for ordering beer, playing corn hole, taking pictures and chatting up Budweiser’s brewmasters.

Surprisingly, the results were phenomenal. Budweiser’s festivals had about 12,000 to 25,000 attendees per event! Assuming its visitors numbered 70,000 and its estimated cost for the activation was $2.5 million—it spent $35 per person!

Thousands of customers are a pretty decent return for a million dollar event!

5. “Bud Bowl”- combined football and tech to create a Snapchat game

Americans have always been into football.

They love to see strong helmeted men go against each other. Not only is it entertaining, but the excitement and anticipation audiences experience while watching—is addicting.

Another thing that Americans love is apps and technology.

In fact, statistics show that Americans downloaded an average of 88.7 apps in 2016 and used an average of 7.6 apps in a day.

Interestingly, Budweiser decided to combine what Americans loved the most in its new advertising campaign.

The brand launched an interactive game called “Bud Bowl” in Snapchat’s Discover panel. The game pits two teams—the classic Budweiser bottle against Bud Light—against each other. Users can choose a time and tap onto the screen to reach the goal.

Not surprisingly, the game was a hit.

By combining what Americans love—in an exciting game—Budweiser won Snapchat’s millennial crowd.

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